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3 Tips to Help You Get Ready for Trick-or-Treaters This Year
Food for Thought: The 5 Basic Taste Categories
Back to School: 3 Tips for a Successful School Fundraiser
What to Know About the Always a Treat Initiative
Why Do Some People Love Spicy Flavors and Others Can’t Stand Them?
Five Ways Lollipops are Good for Your Health
Customers to Decide on Oreo Creation Contest Winner
Understanding the Difference Between Snack and Treat
Three Fundraising Ideas for Your Baseball Team
Yummy Lix Lollipops Perfect for Tailgating Parties
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Then the question arises: where’s the content? Not there yet? That’s not so bad, there’s dummy copy to the rescue. But worse, what if the fish doesn’t fit in the can, the foot’s to big for the boot? Or to small? To short sentences, to many headings, images too large for the proposed design, or too small, or they fit in but it looks iffy for reasons.
A client that’s unhappy for a reason is a problem, a client that’s unhappy though he or her can’t quite put a finger on it is worse. Chances are there wasn’t collaboration, communication, and checkpoints, there wasn’t a process agreed upon or specified with the granularity required. It’s content strategy gone awry right from the start. If that’s what you think how bout the other way around? How can you evaluate content without design? No typography, no colors, no layout, no styles, all those things that convey the important signals that go beyond the mere textual, hierarchies of information, weight, emphasis, oblique stresses, priorities, all those subtle cues that also have visual and emotional appeal to the reader.